Forex- Futures Mentorship

      FOREX -FUTURES  MENTORSHIP

In finacial markets it is more difficult to get the real mentorship about Forex, Futures, Cryptocurrency, bonds, stocks, and bonds because the governmets are not yet regulated these business. In addition, some mentors in this industry does not have the good backgroup and solid skills of mentorsing from the scratches toward the real success.  In africa, many young people has wrong information and poor mindset about the markets because they have been teached by gurus who were selling information on the social media. 

PREPARATORY PHASE

In this preparatory phase, I provide basic information related to financial markets, mentorship, discussion with mentee’s challenges, goals and what he wants from the mentorship. This part is very important because the people joining  mentorship with wrong information.

Who is this phase intended for?

Person want to trade financial market but with no clear informations
Person who need support or clarification about my mentorship
Every person wants to join my trading community.

1.     BEGINNING LEVEL

A beginner in forex trading is someone who is new to financial markets and has little to no prior experience in trading currencies.

 Who is this level intended for?

Person who is new to trading
Person with a little experience
Person who is not able to understand the basics

Our goal in this level is to help a new trader

To improve and understand the basics of market.
To help trader for starting with the right mindset
To motivate a trader for creating good habits and routines too early


2.  INTERMEDIATE LEVEL 


An intermediate financial market  trader is someone who has moved beyond the beginner stage and has a solid understanding of the forex market, trading tools, and basic strategies — but is still developing consistency and deeper skills. 

Who is this level intended for?

An individual with one or more   the following Problems:

1.      No clear and written plan and strategy

Trading signals

Influenced by others

2.      Lack of discipline

Breaking his rules

Trade without rules

Not able to stick to the process and systems

3.       Inconsistency in Results

Sometimes profitable, sometimes not.

They have strategies that sometimes work but aren't yet consistently reliable.

Struggle to stick to a single method or system.

4.       Overtrading

Taking too many trades, especially after a loss or a win (“revenge trading” or “overconfidence”).

Trading without strong setups just to be “in the market.”

5.       Lack of Patience

Impatience to grow the account quickly.

Cutting winning trades too early or letting losing trades run too long.

5. Strategy Hopping

Switching from one strategy to another after a few losses instead of refining one method.

Always looking for the “perfect” system.

6. Poor Risk Management

Risking more on trades that "feel right."

Inconsistent lot sizing or using too much leverage.

Not following a clear risk-reward ratio.

7. Emotional Trading

Letting fear, greed, or frustration control decisions.

Overreacting to market moves.

Struggling with confidence after losses.

8. Not Keeping Detailed Records

Not using a trading journal to analyze mistakes and successes.

Relying on memory rather than data to evaluate performance.

9. Overconfidence After Success

A few winning trades can lead to bigger risks or abandoning discipline.

Mistaking short-term luck for skill.

OUR GOALS IS TO WORK HAND IN HAND TO ACHIVE THESE GOALS

Stick to one tested strategy and refine it.
Be disciplined and patient — trading is a long-term game.
Apply strict risk management rules.
Keep a detailed trading journal to track performance.
Working on emotional control and trading psychology.


3. ADVANCED LEVL


An advanced forex trader is someone with extensive experience, deep market knowledge, and consistent profitability over time. They have mastered technical and fundamental analysis, risk management, and trading psychology, and they often treat trading as a professional career or business.

Who is this level intended for?

Even advanced forex traders: those with years of experience and consistent profitability face challenges. However, these problems are typically more psychological, strategic, or business-related, rather than technical.

Here are the most common problems experienced by advanced financial markets traders:

 1. Complacency and Overconfidence

After consistent success, some traders become overconfident and take unnecessary risks.

May start ignoring risk management rules they followed religiously before.

Belief that “I can’t lose” often leads to overexposure and major drawdowns.

 2. Psychological Fatigue or Burnout

Trading full-time can become mentally exhausting, especially in volatile markets.

Emotional stress, long screen hours, or pressure to perform can lead to poor decision-making.

Burnout can reduce focus and cause careless mistakes.

3. Scaling Up Difficulty

Transitioning from a small account to a large one changes everything — psychologically and logistically.

Larger position sizes bring more stress and second-guessing.

Slippage and execution issues become more noticeable at higher volumes.

 4. Staying Adaptable

Market conditions change — what worked in trending markets may fail in ranging or volatile ones.

Relying too heavily on one strategy can cause issues when that strategy underperforms.

Advanced traders must continually refine and adjust their systems to survive.

 5. Maintaining Discipline During Drawdowns

Drawdowns are inevitable — even for professionals.

Staying confident and rational during periods of loss is difficult, even for seasoned traders.

The temptation to abandon a proven strategy during a losing streak is high.

6. Information Overload

Advanced traders often consume huge amounts of market data (fundamentals, sentiment, technical).

Filtering what's actually useful becomes more difficult as sources multiply.

Risk of “analysis paralysis” — too much data leads to indecision.

 7. Pressure from Managing Other People’s Money

Many advanced traders become fund managers or trade for prop firms.

The pressure of performance, reporting, and investor expectations can interfere with objective decision-making.

The emotional impact of managing large accounts or clients’ funds is different than trading your own money.

8. Neglecting Personal Growth and Balance

Trading can become an obsession, leaving little room for health, relationships, or mental well-being.

Lack of balance eventually affects decision-making and performance.

Our goals are to achieve:

Helping you to systemize your strategies based on your personality
Create good habits and routines
Helping you to continue learning, even after success.
Maintain a strict performance review system and risk controls.
Use trading journals, and analytics,
Stay humble, knowing the market can humble anyone.


TOTAL  PAYMENT FOR A WHOLE MENTORSHIP.



 
Due to discount 
Duration= 1year 


Thanks and full welcome to your financial freedom

Post a Comment

0 Comments